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Book recounts struggles of Asian refugees

by Chim <ChimS1@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 15, 2008 at 05:50 AM

Globe Staff / May 15, 2008
The 1970s, Tem Chea remembers, were a time of fear, running, and
crowded refugee camps.

The Cambodian refugee and his family moved four times from camp to
camp while escaping the horrors of the Khmer Rouge regime that claimed
about 1 million lives. After landing in Oregon, he later moved to
Lowell, where he integrated into American society by becoming a
teacher and eventually helping create the Cambodian American Voter
League.

Last week, a book recounting the struggles of Chea and other Southeast
Asian-Americans in Lowell was released at a special event at the Mogan
Cultural Center. The collection of essays, "Southeast Asian Refugees
and Immigrants in the Mill City," written by academics and published
by the University of Vermont, is a scholarly endeavor that tries to
make sense of the setbacks and victories of Lowell's largest ethnic
group in politics, education, and healthcare.

Chea said the book depicts how people from Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam
have contributed to Lowell. "This gives us the op****tunity to share
our story," Chea said at the book-release event. "It's kind of
therapeutic, so to speak, for some of us who went through so much and
rarely talk about it."

Tuyet-Lan Pho, director emeritus of the Center for Diversity and
Pluralism at the University of Massachusetts at Lowell and one of the
book's co-editors, said the idea for the book emerged more than 10
years ago when more scholarly articles about Lowell Southeast Asian-
American populations started being widely published.

"Lowell has always been an immigrant city," said the 67-year-old
Vietnamese immigrant, who now lives in San Diego. "These essays put
our experiences in perspective."

Her husband, Hin Pho, a UMass-Lowell professor emeritus of political
science who contributed an article for the book, said: "There is such
a rich history here. It needed to be written."

UMass-Lowell political science professor Jeffrey Gerson and Sylvia
Cowan of Lesley University were the other editors of the book, which
can be purchased in bookstores or ordered online at amazon.com.

Southeast Asian-Americans make up about one-fifth of Lowell's
population of 100,000, according to the 2000 US Census. Tuyet-Lan Pho
said the number of Southeast Asian-Americans settling in Lowell picked
up in the 1980s as jobs attracted refugees who had originally settled
on the West Coast. But like any new group, the Southeast Asian
refugees faced discrimination and alienation, she said.

Since those early days, Pho said, she has seen a transformation as the
children of Cambodians and Laotians enrolled in college and the groups
got more politically active.

Former Massachusetts governor Michael Dukakis and his wife, Kitty,
attended the book-release event that drew around 100 residents.
Dukakis praised the Southeast Asian-American community for helping the
economic development of Lowell.

Kitty Dukakis was among nine community leaders who were presented
special awards for their work with Southeast Asian refugees in the
area.

Chea, another honoree, said he hopes some of the essays inspire other
Asian refugees in the Lowell area to share their stories for other
projects and books. Part of the problem, he said, was persuading those
who fled war-torn countries to talk about the past.

"There is still this fear that what we saw back there isn't over, that
something bad is still going to happen," said Chea, who is now
retired. "We are stuck to the past, but there is a fear of the past."

Russell Contreras can be reached at rcontreras@[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Book recounts struggles of Asian refugees
Chim <ChimS1@[EMAIL PR  2008-05-15 05:50:42 

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